Rio Tinto publishes site-by-site water usage data

In 2019 Rio Tinto made a commitment to drive good water stewardship and improve disclosure to stakeholders, by publishing site-by-site surface water usage

In an industry first, for major mining companies, Rio Tinto has publicly detailed information about annual surface water usage across its global network of managed sites in 35 countries, through an interactive map on its website riotinto.com/water.

The database provides information on permissible surface water allocation amounts, the site's yearly allocation usage, and the corresponding catchment runoff from an estimate of average annual rainfall for each managed site that is included. The database will be updated yearly and contains historical comparative data going back five years.

Water stewardship

This pledge is in line with the International Council on Mining and Metals' (ICMM) Water Stewardship Policy Statement, which outlines ICMM members' approaches to water stewardship, and its recommendations for water reporting. It comprises obligations for participants to implement robust and open water governance and effectively manage water at operations.

Rio Tinto Chief Executive Jakob Stausholm said “Water is an essential resource, critical to sustaining biodiversity, people, and economic prosperity. It is also a resource we share with the communities and nature surrounding our operations, so it is essential that we carefully manage our use and hold ourselves accountable to our stakeholders.

“This interactive database brings a new level of transparency and will enable us to engage more deeply with our stakeholders, seek their feedback on our disclosure and continue to focus our efforts on becoming better water stewards for today and future generations.”

Share

Featured Articles

BHP $38bn Anglo-American bid is 'all About Copper'

BHP Group's bid for DeBeers owners Anglo American would create a copper mining group with around 10% of global output

GEM: Non-China Coal Power Sees First Growth Since 2019

Global Energy Monitor 2024 global coal Tracker shows less coal-power capacity was retired in 2023 than for a decade but that trend will be 'short lived'

Biden Ruling 'Threat to US Critical Minerals Mining'

The Essential Minerals Association says Biden's Public Lands Rule is threat to critical minerals mining industry and compromises move to clean energy

Thermo Fisher Scientific Tackling Lithium eco Issue

Sustainability

EC on Importance of Minerals Security Partnership Forum

Sustainability

EU & US form Critical Minerals Security Partnership Forum

Sustainability